Originally posted by b00g13man
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Did Floyd use epitestosterone cream on 24/7? USADA clearly biased in favour of Floyd
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Originally posted by GTTofAK View PostBecause the full list is " a hospital admission, surgical procedure or clinical investigation." Which is shorted to "appropriate medical setting".
Since this wasn't a surgical procedure of clinical investigation then it must be a hospital admission.
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Originally posted by b00g13man View PostRead the entire document you simpleton. Specifically page 7 where it states that a TUE is required when it's not administered during a hospital admission, surgical procedure or clinical investigation. He has a TUE. Explain to me again how the rules have been broken by having it done at home.
You cant look at the WADA rules in singular clauses. You have to look at the whole rule which explicitly prohibits the use of IVs to treat moderate dehydration. Even if Floyd had been treated in the hospital it still would have been against WADA rules because he was only treating moderate dehydration. For which IVs are explicitly banned.
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Originally posted by GTTofAK View PostWell that is a load of total bull****! You can claim its been "murdered"? but you are too ****** to make the case youreself.
Bottom line WADA explicitly bans IVs for moderate dehydration. There is no gray area here . USADA broke WADA's rules when they issued the TUE for moderate dehydration.
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Originally posted by b00g13man View PostWhat does an IV solution for rehydration have to do with Michael Jackson's drug ****tail, and how would anything have changed if the doctor had prescribed the same drugs in a hospital anyway?
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Originally posted by IR0NFIST View PostIt's pointless trying to reason with the guy, his head is lodged too far up Floyd's ass. All circulation to his brain has been cutoff completely, even the jaws of life couldn't save him at this point. The only thing we can do now is pray that God have mercy on his poor unfortunate soul.
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Originally posted by GTTofAK View PostI read it. The rules allow for emergency IVs in the case of extreme dehydration even outside of a hospital, in which a TUE would be granted. If EMS came to Floyd's house and found him unresponsive with heat exhaustion then an IV would be administered.
You cant look at the WADA rules in singular clauses. You have to look at the whole rule which explicitly prohibits the use of IVs to treat moderate dehydration. Even if Floyd had been treated in the hospital it still would have been against WADA rules because he was only treating moderate dehydration. For which IVs are explicitly banned.
The appendix on page 7 destroys your entire argument.
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Originally posted by ADP02 View PostFloyd was supposed to get 50ml of saline solution. Unfortunately like Michael Jacksons' doctor, FLoyd's doctor fell asleep watching one of Floyd's boring fights. When the doctor woke up, he realized that instead of 50ml, a whopping 750ml of the substance went into Floyd's system.
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Originally posted by Eff Pandas View PostWhat I'm saying is a 2nd year med student could get you a moderate or w/e level dehydrated medical diagnosis rightly or wrongly.
USADA may have issued a TUE for moderate dehydration but such a TUE is explicitly against WADA rules. USADA broke WADA's rules.
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Originally posted by b00g13man View PostDo you have some proof that it wasn't a mild case of dehydration that we're not aware of?
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